In the interest of saying a few words about the subject, I will attempt to give a brief synopsis of what LeVay, a neuroscientist and long-time researcher on the biology of sexual orientation, has to say in the article. The main issue he begins with is the fact that he is often asked, when giving talks, whether or not homosexuality is somehow genetically determined, and if so what might be its usefulness, if the main biological purpose of sex is to pass genes on to the next generation. As he puts it: “If being gay is genetic, and gay sex doesn’t produce children, why don’t those genes die out?

As he notes, this is an intriguing question. And although he makes clear that no one really knows the answer (at least not as yet), LeVay does discuss several possible hypotheses, which others have offered, as to why this may be the case. For the most part, these theories cluster around how other individuals, that is, not gay people themselves, might somehow benefit from gay genes being passed on. Sisters of gay people, for example, might receive some kind of advantage from a sort of gay-nanny syndrome (my words, not his), whereby gay brothers would assist their straight sisters in the raising of children. Another theory speculates that some small amount of gay genes, which are already in the parental mix, may somehow get passed on to the straight siblings of gay brothers or sisters, such that otherwise heterosexual male siblings might present themselves as “mildly feminine,” and females as more “masculine.” The somewhat feminine men are then purported to be more attractive to women. As such, in the end they are consequently better able to produce a larger number of offspring. Regarding more masculine women, although still heterosexual, the theory is that they are more sexually active and aggressive, which would result in more sexual activity, and therefore in a greater number of offspring that might be produced, as a result.

I want to emphasize once again that LeVay is not proposing that these notions are necessarily an explanation in and of themselves, only that they have been proposed as hypotheses. And we must note that hypotheses, by their very definition, are starting points, unproven theories. Even so, I want to say that, as hypotheses, these particular examples appear to me to be extraordinarily lacking in any power to convince. First of all, at least in my experience, I know of virtually no gay men who have significantly contributed to the rearing of their sisters’ offspring. And in regard to the greater masculine/feminine tendency in siblings of gay people, again this seems farfetched and fanciful to me. I certainly have never observed it, either in my own family, or in the families of any gay people whom I have ever encountered. And what may even be more germane, perhaps, is that the entire idea of what is considered to be masculine, and what is considered feminine, is profoundly dependent on society and on social norms. Therefore, to conflate biological determinism with societal or cultural constructs seems to me to be highly suspect. And even if we could somehow agree on what either a fully masculine man (if that is the right term), or a mildly feminine man, might actually look like, who has proven that women prefer the latter over the former? I will let heterosexual women weigh in on this, but again it is likely that much would depend on exactly what the definition of masculine and feminine turns out to be in any given cultural context.

Although, as I have said, LeVay does not overtly give credence to any of these theories, he does note toward the end of his article: “As a happy homosexual, I find it a bit disconcerting that my sexual orientation might simply be the price that evolution pays to improve straight men’s performance in the sexual marketplace.” That sounds to me as though he may think that such hypotheses might have at least some degree of credibility.

If, for the moment at least, we assent to the idea that there is a “gay gene,” or perhaps more likely a whole complex of such genes which, when activated by a physical or a social or a cultural stimulus, somehow results in a person being gay, what does that tell us? In fact, it seems to me that the entire notion then gives rise to a number of other questions. First of all, I believe that it is questionable to make the assumption that heterosexuality is the base line from which any other sexual orientation must deviate. Is that really the case? If sheer numbers are the sole criterion, I suppose there may be a degree of truth in it. Still, it does not take into consideration the sliding scale, if you will, that sexuality is for most people. During the course of our lives, all of us are attracted to countless other people. Some of those people are individuals of the opposite sex, and some are of the same sex; some are older than we are, some are younger. If we are to be completely honest with ourselves, most of us have to admit that at some time or another in our lives we have been attracted to a whole host of individuals. If society were to place no special onus, no particular meaning, no negative connotation on same-sex attraction, I have no doubt that many more people would act on such impulses, at least some of the time. And so, who is to say that exclusive heterosexual attraction is the norm, the default, against which everything else is to be measured and found deviant? On the contrary, it seems to me that sexual attraction, itself, is the norm, and that this attraction is directed toward whoever it may be, depending on a whole host of individual, societal, and cultural preferences and specifications.

Another question arises in regard to this notion of what “use” gay genes may have. Just how far are we prepared to go in order to say that things are fully biologically determined? Are some people, for example, predisposed to being artists because of their genetic make up? Surely it cannot be construed that the artistic vocation is somehow biologically useful. And if that is the case, of what possible benefit would an “artistic gene” serve? How would it enhance the next generation, and what would lead to its selection over, let us say, genes that predispose an individual toward something else which makes lots of money? The evolutionary theory at work here is that those who are most successful (read, in modern society, those who make the most money) select others who have equal success. It happens in the animal kingdom all the time. The biggest and strongest males get to mate with the most fertile female or females. Yet, it is clear that most artists remain at the lower end of the economic pecking order in the majority of modern societies.

Neither am I suggesting here that gay people have a corner on the market when it comes to the creation of art. Who could have been more heterosexual than Pablo Picasso? And most of the great Impressionist masters of the 19th century were straight in their sexual orientation (at least as far as we know). We could go on endlessly talking about other heterosexuals who excelled in one form or another of the arts, but that would take us too far afield. My point here is not that artistic inclination equates either with heterosexual or homosexual inclination. It is only that, if both stem from genetic predispositions, then both are equally “useless” from a strictly evolutionary point of view. And yet, the world has always had its artists, just as there have always been gay people.

Human sexuality generally cannot be reduced to any one gene, or even to a set of genes. I believe that sexual orientation, of whatever stripe, is not solely predetermined either by biology or society, as much as both probably do play some role in its unfolding and in the particular expression it can take in any given individual. This is not to say that neuroscientists such as Simon LeVay ought not to continue research and exploration. Quite the contrary. The more we learn, the more we begin to understand the underpinnings of the enormously complex and endlessly fascinating topic which is human sexuality. But neither should we fall into the philosophical trap known as reductio ad absurdum, and claim that being gay can be reduced to something as simple-minded as help in the rearing of one’s sister’s children.

If ever we do some day arrive at a full and profound understanding of the origins of homosexuality, my guess is that it will be seen to be as expansive, as full of beauty and wonder, and as utterly mysterious as heterosexual attraction is or ever has been. On that day, let us hope, religious groups and others who currently condemn same-sex attraction will instead come to honor and to celebrate the stunning and awesome miracle that it clearly is.